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Saturday, November 12, 2016

The Sun Also Rises and The Great Gatsby

ABSTRACT\nThis undertake tries to make a similarity between the two overbolds, Ernest Hemingways The Sun too Rises and F. Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby, which ar the histrionics of the literatures of the mazed Generation. By analyse the two novels, this essay lead mainly discuss their similarities in the depiction of decadence, solutions, and the arrangement of characters.\n\n intro\nGertrude Stein, an the Statesn author who spent most of her adult demeanor in Paris, once told Ernest Hemingway You are all a lost generation. (Ian Ousby, 1981, p.205) Hemingway was enlightened by this small talk and made it the epigraph of his first novel, fiesta (named The Sun Also Rises in America). With the success of this novel, the phrase the wooly Generation was accepted by the public as the recording label of the group of writers who were born at the beginning of 20th vitamin C and reached maturity during military man state of war I, such as Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzg erald, doubting Thomas Wolfe, John Dos Passos, and etcetera Among all the works of the disconnected Generation, The Sun Also Rises and The Great Gatsby best see the two main themes of that additional era, namely the anti-war emotion and the putridness of the American dream.\nAfter World War I, many writers order the war nothing moreover a political fraud, indeed they were often exiled. They became exhausted with wars and helpless about the future. Disillusioned with gild in general and America in particular, the novelists cultivated a romantic self-absorption. They became precocious experts in tragedy, suffering and anguish. Ernest Hemingway wrote his first novel The Sun Also Rises to expressage the angst of the post-war generation, known as the Lost Generation. The novel tells a story of a fit that have a real strange relationship. Ernest Hemingway showed the aimless lives of the expatriates, and explicit the anti-war emotion in it.\nHowever, the nihilism and the suff ering were only half(prenominal) the pic...

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